TD SYNNEX Corporation (SNX) delivered a solid beat on Thursday, reminding investors why this IT services distributor remains a key player in the technology supply chain.
The company reported fourth-quarter revenue of $17.4 billion, comfortably surpassing Wall Street's expectations of $16.9 billion. That represents a 9.7% jump year over year, which is pretty impressive for a company moving billions in tech equipment every quarter. On the earnings front, TD SYNNEX posted adjusted EPS of $3.83, beating the consensus estimate of $3.73 per share. Even better, that figure marks a robust 24% year-over-year growth.
CEO Patrick Zammit struck an optimistic tone in the earnings release: "We are well positioned for the year ahead, underpinned by our specialized business model, an unrivaled portfolio that is indexed toward higher-growing technologies and our continued focus on delivering best-in-class customer experiences. These strengths give us confidence in our ability to drive sustainable growth through time."
But here's where things get interesting. The guidance for the first quarter came in slightly below what some analysts were hoping for. TD SYNNEX projects adjusted EPS between $3.00 and $3.50, compared with the Street's consensus estimate of $3.21. Revenue guidance landed at $15.1 billion to $15.9 billion, versus expectations of $15.43 billion. The company also said adjusted gross billings for the quarter should come in between $22.7 billion and $23.7 billion.
The stock reacted calmly, rising 0.5% to trade at $148.32 on Friday. Not exactly fireworks, but not a selloff either.
Wall Street analysts wasted no time recalibrating their models following the earnings release. Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring maintained his Overweight rating but trimmed his price target from $177 down to $172. Barclays analyst Tim Long kept an Equal-Weight rating and shaved his target from $164 to $163. Meanwhile, UBS analyst David Vogt remained bullish, maintaining a Buy rating and actually raising his price target from $187 to $193.
So what's the takeaway here? TD SYNNEX is executing well and growing in the right areas, but the near-term guidance suggests some caution about what's coming next. Analysts are split on whether that warrants concern or just a bit of conservative planning from management.




